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Biology

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Very little has been documented on the biology of this species. Pairings have been noted from August, accompanied by male display songs and 'booming', and nests have been observed in October (2). Just a single egg is produced by females each season, a reproductive rate that is unusually low for gamebirds (5). Like other curassows, the diet consists of fruit, seeds, soft plants, larvae and insects (2).
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Conservation

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Fortunately, large parts of the southern helmeted curassow's current range are protected by Amboró and Carrasco National Parks (2). A number of extensive surveys have been conducted in recent years (2), and continue, with the hope that the information gained will help inform a long-term conservation programme (8). Sadly, most surveys have met with little success in locating the species in many of the searched areas (2). However, surveys conducted by a team from Asociacion Armonía (BirdLife in Bolivia) resulted in the remarkable rediscovery of the subspecies C. u. koepckeae in Peru in 2005, being the first observation of this bird in 36 years. This work has subsequently been followed up with an environmental awareness project, involving educating local people about their unique bird, and distributing T-shirts and notebooks that depict the curassow along with words that inspire pride in the local fauna and emphasise the need to preserve it (4). The project appears to have had some success, with reports that there is a genuine enthusiasm amongst local people to protect their endemic bird now that they appreciated its global significance (4), which is a positive first step towards safeguarding its long-term survival.
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Description

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This large forest bird, also known as the horned curassow, gets its curious common name from the long, blue, horn-shaped casque protruding above its bright red bill (2). Like other curassows, the male's plumage is mainly black, with a snow white lower abdomen and under-tail coverts (2) (3). The tail has a broad white tip and the legs are pale red. The sexes are alike but the white colouration of the male is replaced by a dark reddish-cinnamon colour in the female. The casque is shorter and rounder in the subspecies C. u. koepckeae, which can also be distinguished by its fainter white tip to the tail (2).
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Habitat

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Ranging from 450 to 1,200 m above sea level, the southern helmeted curassow inhabits dense, humid, lower montane forest and adjacent lowland evergreen forest. This bird usually stays above 550 m above sea level, but descends to lower levels during the dry season (2).
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Range

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The southern helmeted curassow is known from central Bolivia and central and east Peru. The nominate subspecies, C. u. unicornis, occurs in the adjacent Amboró and Carrasco National Parks, Bolivia. Only a single individual has been observed outside these protected areas in the last 30 years, in Cerros de Távara, Puno, Peru, in 1992 (2). The subspecies C. u. koepckeae is found on the Cerros de Sira in Huánuco, Peru, where it had not been seen since 1969 until its exciting rediscovery there in 2005 (4).
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Status

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Classified as Endangered (EN) on the IUCN Red List 2006 (1).
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Threats

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The southern helmeted curassow is now threatened with extinction due to over-hunting and habitat destruction (6). There has been widespread clearance of Bolivia's forests within this bird's altitudinal range for the cultivation of staple and export crops (2), such as coca and citrus fruits (7). Rural development, road-building and hunting are also thought to have dramatically impacted the survival of this rare bird. In Peru, oil exploration poses a threat to the species' habitat, in addition to opening up the foothills to human colonisation and hunting (2).
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Horned curassow

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The horned curassow (Pauxi unicornis), or southern helmeted curassow, is a species of bird in the family Cracidae found in humid tropical and subtropical forests. It was first described by James Bond and Rodolphe Meyer de Schauensee in 1939 from a specimen collected in Bolivia, and further birds that were described from Peru in 1971 were thought to be a new subspecies. However, the taxonomical position (as subspecies or independent species) of the birds found in Peru in 1971 is unclear. The horned curassow as originally described is endemic to Bolivia.[2] It is a large, predominantly black bird with a distinctive casque on its forehead. It is an uncommon bird with a limited range and is suffering from habitat loss, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has rated its conservation status as being "critically endangered".

Taxonomy and systematics

In 1937 while in Bolivia Mr M. A. Carriker found two birds, a male and female, which were in the cracid family. The specimens were subsequently described as a new species by James Bond and Rodolphe Meyer de Schauensee in 1939 and given the scientific name Pauxi unicornis placing it in a genus Pauxi alongside the species P. pauxi.[3] In 1969 another two birds, again a male and female were discovered which resembled those found by Mr. Carriker in 1937. However this time they were found in Peru a long way from the previous P. unicornis discoveries in Bolivia. These Peruvian specimens were described by John Weske and John Terborgh in 1971 as a new subspecies of P. unicornis which they named in honour of Maria Koepcke.[3]

Although the consensus at the time of discovery for P. unicornis to be a species with two subspecies in the genus Pauxi, many different suggestions have been made since. Some suggestions relate to the grouping of species and subspecies within the genus Pauxi. In 1943 Wetmore and Phelps described a new subspecies of the closely related P. pauxi called P. p. gilliardi. When Wetmore and Phelps looked at the three Pauxi forms known at the time, they concluded that P. p. gilliardi was an intermediate form between P. pauxi and P. unicornis. As a result of this they grouped all three forms into a single species with unicornis becoming a subspecies of pauxi.[4][5] This position was subsequently rejected by Charles Vaurie who argued that P. pauxi and P. unicornis were not conspecific. When Weske and Terborgh discovered the subspecies koepckeae they concluded pauxi and unicornis should be considered separate species.[3][5] Additional studies by Gastañaga and coauthors in 2011 considered koepckeae to be a wholly distinct species on the basis of a somewhat smaller and more triangular crest and different vocalisations.[6] Gastañaga et al. also coined the name Sira curassow as an English name for the bird in their 2011 paper;[6] the name used by the local inhabitants for the bird is piuri.[7]

Other taxonomic suggestions discuss whether the genus Pauxi should stand alone or be grouped with other genera. In 1965 François Vuilleumier suggested the Pauxi species should be moved into a single genus alongside all the other species in the closely related genera Mitu, Crax and Nothocrax. Just two years later Charles Vaurie opposed this 'lumping' of species and argued that Pauxi, Mitu, Crax and Nothocrax should each be their own genera.[4] Not content with either of these two options Delacour and Amadon suggested that Pauxi and Mitu should indeed be grouped with Crax, but that Nothocrax was distinct enough to be its on genus. Many subsequent authors followed Vaurie, Delacour and Amadon in having Nothocrax as a sister clade to Pauxi, Mitu and Crax, while most have followed Vaurie in having the three other clades as three distinct genera.[3][5][8]

Mitochondrial analysis conducted in 2004 suggests that P. unicornis is a sister species to Mitu tuberosum, while the other Pauxi species, P. pauxi, is sister to the combined Mitu and P. unicornis clade. This means the genus Pauxi is not monophyletic but paraphyletic, and to resolve this parsimoniously the genus Pauxi should be sunk into synonymy with Mitu.[8] The paraphyly of Pauxi could be due to incomplete lineage sorting, where a gene tree is inconsistent with its species tree, however this phenomenon should be less prevalent in deep phylogenetic splits (i.e. between genera). Because of this, Pereira et al. conclude incomplete lineage sorting is unlikely to account for the paraphyletic Pauxi genera because, according to their own analysis, Mitu and Pauxi diverged approximately 6.5mya.[8]

Description

The horned curassow is among the largest cracid species. It measures 85 to 95 cm (33 to 37 in) in length.[9] Body mass in large males is up to 3.7 to 3.9 kg (8.2 to 8.6 lb) and only the great curassow is heavier amongst the cracids, although the black curassow and the closely related helmeted curassow are around the same length.[10] Among standard measurements, the wing chord is 38.1 to 40.2 cm (15.0 to 15.8 in), the tail is 31 to 34.8 cm (12.2 to 13.7 in) and the tarsus is 10 to 10.8 cm (3.9 to 4.3 in).[10] It has a distinctive horn or casque on the forehead which projects for over 6 cm. The plumage is generally black, but lacks a blue sheen in primary feathers, and has a white belly, thigh tufts and under-tail coverts. The tail also has white tips.[5]

Status

The horned curassow is threatened by habitat loss. Until 2004 the horned curassow was classified as Vulnerable by the IUCN Red List due to a small and declining population, but was changed to Endangered in 2005 due to an estimated smaller range and greater risk from human activities.[11] In Bolivia the potential habitat of subspecies P. unicornis unicornis may cover an area of 4,000 km2 including the national parks: Amboró, Carrasco and Isiboro Sécure. Despite concentrated fieldwork there are many parts of this potential habitat in which no individuals have been found, for example the most north west 2,000 km2.[11]

References

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2018). "Pauxi unicornis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T45090397A126746836. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T45090397A126746836.en. Retrieved 16 November 2021.|date= / |doi= mismatch
  2. ^ Clements, J. F., T. S. Schulenberg, M. J. Iliff, D. Roberson, T. A. Fredericks, B. L. Sullivan, and C. L. Wood. 2015. The eBird/Clements checklist of birds of the world: v2015. Downloaded from http://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/download/
  3. ^ a b c d Weske, J.S.; Terborgh, J.W. (1971). "A New Subspecies of Curassow of the Genus Pauxi from Peru" (PDF). The Auk. 88 (2): 233–238. doi:10.2307/4083876. JSTOR 4083876. S2CID 87421719.
  4. ^ a b Vaurie, C. (1967). "Systematic notes on the bird family Cracidae, 10. The genera Mitu and Pauxi and the generic relationships of the Cracini". American Museum Novitates (2307): 1–20. hdl:2246/3507.
  5. ^ a b c d Cox, G.; Read, J.M.; Clarke, R.O.S. & Easty, V.S. (1997). "Studies of Horned Curassow Pauxi unicornis in Bolivia". Bird Conservation International. 7 (3): 199–211. doi:10.1017/S0959270900001532.
  6. ^ a b Gastañaga-C., M.; MacLeod, R.; Brooks, D.M.; Hennessey, B. (2011). "Distinctive morphology, ecology, and first vocal descriptions of Sira Curassow (Pauxi [unicornis] koepckeae): evidence for species rank" (PDF). Ornitol. Neotrop. 22: 267–279. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-05. Retrieved 2013-03-29.
  7. ^ Gastañaga, M.; Hennessey, A.B (2005). "Uso de información local para reevaluar la población de Pauxi unicornis en Perú" (PDF). Cotinga (in Spanish). 23: 18–22.
  8. ^ a b c Pereira, S.L.; Baker, A.J. (2004). "Vicariant speciation of curassows (Aves, Cracidae): a hypothesis based on mitochondrial DNA phylogeny". Auk. 121 (3): 682–694. doi:10.1642/0004-8038(2004)121[0682:VSOCAC]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 86320083.
  9. ^ Horned Curassow Pauxi unicornis. BirdLife International
  10. ^ a b Hughes, Nigel (2006) Curassows, Guans and Chachalacas, Wildside Books (UK), ISBN 0905062264
  11. ^ a b MacLeod, Ross; Soria, Rodrigo; Gastañaga, Melvin (2006). "Horned Curassow (Pauxi unicornis)". In Brooks, D.M. (ed.). Conserving Cracids: The most Threatened Family of Birds in the Americas (PDF). Miscellaneous Publications of The Houston Museum of Natural Science, Number 6. ISBN 0-9668278-2-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-10-06. Retrieved 2010-11-26.
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Horned curassow: Brief Summary

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The horned curassow (Pauxi unicornis), or southern helmeted curassow, is a species of bird in the family Cracidae found in humid tropical and subtropical forests. It was first described by James Bond and Rodolphe Meyer de Schauensee in 1939 from a specimen collected in Bolivia, and further birds that were described from Peru in 1971 were thought to be a new subspecies. However, the taxonomical position (as subspecies or independent species) of the birds found in Peru in 1971 is unclear. The horned curassow as originally described is endemic to Bolivia. It is a large, predominantly black bird with a distinctive casque on its forehead. It is an uncommon bird with a limited range and is suffering from habitat loss, and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has rated its conservation status as being "critically endangered".

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